Workspaces for Creative Enterprise: Selected Case Studies
Compiled by Keith Hackett
A Foundation
The
AFoundation is a charitable trust, established to support the contemporary
visual arts. It runs a former school – Rochelle – located in Shoreditch in
Central London, as well as buildings near the south docks in Central
Liverpool.
Established
as a Charitable Trust, the AFoundation uses its income to support visual arts
activities, including exhibitions, studio bursaries, creating educational
resources, increasing public access to art, the provision of workspaces and
other support for artists.
It
also garners other income and uses this alongside its own financial resources.
It runs Rochelle – a complex of three buildings formerly a school in East London. It acquired this property some five years
ago, and has recently converted the buildings into a complex of workspaces, an
exhibitions space and a canteen and cafe / meeting area.
Its
objectives in doing this are to generate "a creative community" that
"can cross-over between artistic practice and exhibitions". It aims
to do this on an enterprise model, and as a result, readily accepts that is has
to generate necessary income from the workspaces it provides.
The
buildings were launched in 2006 and as a consequence of the high running costs
associated with the building, it does find that the studio spaces it can offer
are out of the reach of most visual artists – but affordable by more commercial
creative businesses such as fashion and graphic design companies, arts
administration etc.
It
freely acknowledges the problems this can cause less-well-off artists but
states its aim as "using its resources to create a sustainable model
capable of supporting visual artists in other ways" – through the
exhibitions, studio bursaries and other support mentioned earlier.
In
total, the workspaces cover 7,000 square foot and the exhibition area another
3,000. So income from one sector in the creative industries is re-used to
support activities amongst another – an interesting cross-over subsidy model,
with clear sustainable objectives.
Further
developments are planned within the building complex – including shared
three-month long affordable work spaces designed to provide working space for
emerging creative practitioners and encourage collaborative working across
art-forms and between practices.
Hatcham Park Mews
This
is a “Live and Workspace” residential scheme in London’s New Cross Gate developed by Greater
London Enterprise Properties (GLE). It was a ten-property development for sale,
completed in 2004.
Each
unit is three stories high with floor areas ranging between 1,055 and 1,184
square feet. The scheme comprises ten units totalling 1,034.5 square metres
(11,132 square feet) and averaging 1,113 square foot per unit). Sale price per unit
averaged £238,500 when first marketed – equivalent to £214.29p a square foot
capital purchase - plus duty.
50%
of the units were sold based on the plans alone and all were sold on scheme
completion. Built to be low cost and affordable – in London’s terms at least - the scheme is of
interest in three respects as regards creative workspace.
First,
the workspaces within each unit were customised – and built to the purchasers
specifications within a part of the property chosen by the buyer – which means
that the workspace does not simply occupy the garage space on the ground floor
which is a more typical model.
Second
each unit is registered both for Council Tax and Business Rates – which
formalises the work aspects of the scheme – and hopefully protects each unit to
an extent for re-conversion back to simple residential.
hird,
GLE’s records show that 40% of the purchasers were working in the creative
industries – as performers, photographers and musicians. Live and workspace is
a particular solution where property prices are high, or where land is scarce.
It also appeals to professions and types of enterprises, which are
under-capitalised and so find difficulties purchasing or renting separate
residential and work-related spaces.
The
GLE model goes a considerable way to protecting the work elements within the
scheme and so is to some extent a model of best practice – as some other
live-work schemes, particularly in rural locations, have been seen as
mechanisms to avoid planning restraints on house building.
Live
and work schemes provide a customised solution for the current working
arrangements of many creatives – home working with a genuine workspace
attached.
Herbie Treeheads Dinosaur Show
This
is based in Bridport, Dorset where it is housed in part of a barn alongside an
architectural salvage company. But as a touring company based on the circus
tradition, so it is also housed in a tent. From origins as a street performer
in London’s Covent Garden,
Herbie Treehead has developed a troupe of performers – many with origins in
contemporary circus – who now tour festivals and events with their dinosaurs.
Based
out of a barn on the A35 on the outskirts of Bridport, the Show tours in a custom-made
tent that is used to house the show and audience. But the purpose of the tent
is more than simply housing the show. Herbie Treehead also works with the
festivals in order to promote other events and acts in the tents, and with
other groups of performers seeking a venue in which to perform.
So
the tent itself acts as a temporary workspace for performers (and authors,
poets and other artists) and as the focus for “temporary festivals”. In this
context the group provide both events programming expertise, and run the back
and front of house facilities. The group have been working in this way for the
past two years – having purchased the tent, and built the dinosaurs, following
a joint personal investment by the individuals involved of £75,000.
This
investment took the form of a commercial loan borrowed from a bank – based on a
business case presented by the group themselves. The group is now in the
process of working to pay off the loan – and anticipate that they will do so.
They then plan to secure some woodland and buildings on the Dorset Heritage
Coast – and open their version of Jurassic Park as a permanent home-base for the
Show.
Their
aim is to own this facility and to use it as an asset to develop similar
cultural activities amongst as wider group of creatives. Herbie stresses
however, that they are not a tent hire company – rather, the tent is a key
component within a cultural product. The tent itself is owned separately – with
the remainder of the company operated through Treehead Ltd. This two company
model protects both aspects of the operations.
Persistence Works
This
is the first building developed and owned by Yorkshire ArtsSpace Society.
Opened in 2001, this building in central Sheffield
has 51 studios providing accommodation for 67 artists and craftspeople. It cost
£5.3m to construct and was financed by the national Lottery (£3.5m) and ERDF
(£1.8m).
The
building has a reception and exhibition area, organises an Open Studios
Programme twice annually, and houses a public arts space with artists in
residence. It receives £40,000 subsidy
from the Arts Council to support this artistic programme – covering the costs
of the studios from the rental income.
The
origins of the building lie in the ArtSpace Society, who previously occupied a
poor quality rented building elsewhere in Sheffield.
The Society – which combines the interests of crafts people and visual artists
– recognised a need for a modern building – in part on the grounds of security
of tenure but also for safety and financial benefits as well.
As
a result they raised finance for a purpose built property, designed to provide
a flexible range of workspaces and to minimise the running costs associated
with these. Rent is £2.50 a square foot – regardless of the size of the studio
– and services charges extra.
The
Society attracts Business Rate Relief because of its charitable status and
chooses to subsidise the 20% it does pay from its rental income. The Society
aims to make this the first of a number of workspace developments – seeking to
build a range of facilities in the future including smaller units.
The
building offers an example of a purpose built property and demonstrates the
significant saving that can be made for the tenant occupying such a type of
bespoken property development – which are of course of direct benefit to the
artist and craftspeople themselves.
Creative Space Management
This is a private limited company that manages workspace at the Round
Foundry Media Centre (www.roundfoundry.net)
in Leeds.
The company was set up in 2005, with the objective to create and manage
quality creative workspace operated in partnership with Regional Development
Agencies, similar public bodies as well as the private sector. The company
seeks to achieve this via strategic partnerships designed to provide the
operators with economic and cultural benefits, and the tenants with quality
workspace and added value services designed to reinforce and grow their businesses.
These services include support for home-based creatives through
initiatives such as vitual ofice services and drop-ins for sole traders, as
well as managed workspaces and business incubators. The company's
director-shareholders are the same management team which developed the
Huddersfield Media Centre - and were then commissioned to establish the Round
Foundry by Yorkshire Forward.
They left the Huddersfield Centre when their proposal for a
Management Buy-Out (MBO) was turned down in favour of a more traditional
public-subsidy solution, and forged a partnership with a leading commercial
regeneration business that manages socially responsible investments for pension
funds. The company currently manages facilities within the Round Foundry, and
is in discussions in regard to a number of other projects with its various
strategic partners and investors.
Toby Hyam, the managing director is clear about the difference between
their company and more mainstream large-scale commercial property operations,
stating "we aim to achieve results through a value-driven but also
commercial approach. Investing in culture and creativity is as much a part of
our jobs as ensuring that our buildings are based around vibrant communities.”
www.creativespaceman.com
Annex Inc Limited
This
is a property and business incubation company, which emerged from a “buy-out”
of the property assets of the former Liverpool Everyman Theatre. Annex Inc Ltd
now owns and lets six properties along Liverpool’s
Hope Street Corridor, which house mainly small performing arts, media, TV
production and design companies. Its activities focus on offering flexible
short and medium term lettings for growing small creative businesses. The
business specifically seeks to sustain and grow the creative business cluster
in the Hope Street
area of Liverpool. The origins of the business
lie in the financial collapse of the Everyman Theatre back in mid-1990s. A
tenant of the then theatre, the Everyman Bistro, was housed in the basement of
the theatre where it provided a successful cafe-restaurant bar.
When the
Everyman went into liquidation the management of the Bistro approached the
receiver to buy the freehold of the theatre – in order to preserve their own
business and exert some controls over the future use of the theatre’s main
auditorium – put simply, to stop it becoming a bingo hall. The response of the
receiver was positive – yes, but ....... And the but? It was that the Bistro company
had to buy everything the theatre owned, which included two other properties on
Hope Street
used as rehearsal rooms and administrative offices. These properties themselves
had tenants who paid rent to the theatre – and provided the theatre with a considerable
source of earned income. Faced with this offer - which they could not refuse -
the Bistro approached a colleague and friend, who was also a film accountant
and business person.
Together they set up two companies – one to purchase the
Theatre Freehold on behalf of the Bistro, and the second to purchase and manage
the wider assets. This second company was Annex Inc Ltd. Since 1995, this
company has bought several more buildings as they have come up for sale along
Hope Street, and now provides flexible workspaces – mainly, but not
exclusively, for creative businesses – over 26,000 square feet of property.
Located at the heart of one of Liverpool’s cultural districts, the company has
played a very significant role in protecting the cultural ambience in the area
generally - choosing to maintain a focus on office accommodation whilst
property companies across most of the rest of the City Centre were selling-out,
for residential conversion schemes.
As a result the company has become one of
the main providers of creative workspace in the city. It remains completely
reliant on private funds and bank borrowings – and at no stage has it received
grant – although a number of its tenants are themselves grant-subsidised – such
as the Hope Street Project, and the Playhouse and Everyman Theatre Trust. More
recently the company has been in discussions with this Trust concerning a
possible redevelopment on part of the site, as part of rebuilding a re-modelled
Liverpool Theatre. For Annex Inc the biggest problems it faces are in the
nature of the properties it own and the challenges it faces making these DDA
compliant.
Blundell Street Works Ltd
This is a property development and business
incubation company focussing on the new media and music industries in Liverpool. It owns and has developed for rent, 26,000
square feet of workspace in an old industrial area close to Liverpool’s
Albert Docks.
The
complex includes a live music and venue and restaurant, offices for digital
design businesses and visual artists’ studios. It has six major shareholders
and is a Limited Company.
The
business was originally established for three reasons – to demonstrate that
cultural activities could transform neglected areas of a City centre, to
subsidise artists workspaces through commercial cross-over funds, and to test a
possible “equity for rent” model designed to support and intensify local
economic activities and transform anchor tenants into equity shareholders.
The
company bought its first property in 1998 with a mix of personal and bank loans
and share equity. This building was converted over the next two years – to
house a live music venue bar and restaurant plus two floors of “digital company
incubation spaces” then run by the International Centre for Digital Content
based at Liverpool
John Moores
University.
The
company bought a second building on the same block two years later, and
converted this to a second stage for the live music operator plus a floor of
artists studios totalling 4,000 square foot. The remaining two floors continued
unimproved and are used a storage – mainly for creative companies. Again, the
purchase was made using a mix of personal loans and commercial borrowings – all
repaid with interest at commercial rates.
The
development has been highly influential in developing a “feel” and “creative
focus” for the wider area – which now also houses properties own by the A
Foundation and used as gallery spaces in association with the Liverpool
Biennial Festival. Blundell Street Works has had the provision of artists workspace,
including visual artists studios as one of its key objectives, and uses rental
incomes from the cafe bar and design businesses to subsidise the rents required
from the artists studios.
So
it provides a model for achievable workspace spanning a variety of art-forms
and professions. The rental yield is also used to re-pay borrowings, which it
is anticipated will be largely cleared by 2008 whereupon a significant dividend
will be paid to shareholders.
The International Centre for Digital Content
This
is part of Liverpool
John Moores
University. It has four
divisions - undergraduate level courses and post-graduate research, community
and professional services and consultancy, blue-skies and applied research, and
a business incubator to develop spin-out digital enterprises.
From
origins over a decade ago as the University’s Learning Methods Unit, the Centre
has grown very significantly, attracting substantial public funds from both the
Higher Education funding mechanisms and from European Structural Fund
Programmes. Support from the Structural Funds has taken two forms – ESF to
support training courses and ERDF for capital projects and business development
schemes.
These
capital projects have included the development of premises, whilst the business
support schemes have focused particularly on support for digital enterprise
growth. This business growth is provided through a digital business incubation
centre – called DigitalInc.
Originally
based in rented property at Blundell Street, this facility offers rented desk
spaces, broad band and digital technologies, shared meeting facilities and
business advisors – all together in one place. It also links to training
programmes and academic support offered through other divisions within ICDC.
DigitalInc
originally occupied 5,000 square foot of office space containing some dozen
companies and thirty hot desks, when first established in Blundell Street in 2001 – but has since
expanded on relocation to the former Marconi Factory site in Edge Lane in Liverpool.
ICDC now occupy a small part of this site – which overall contains in excess of
200,000 square foot of business space – most of which remains empty at present.
The
arrangements with the incubator businesses include an arrangement for sharing
intellectual property rights in the products created – in exchange for low rent
terms. This arrangement is structured by ICDC to provide a success share and
source of earned revenue long-term. Whilst popular as a principle this is
proving hard to enforce in reality – with the companies themselves resisting
the loss of their IPR.
Time
spent in the incubator is in theory, limited, but again, this arrangement is
also proving flexible as well. Certainly successful companies have emerged from
the Incubator – and one, JAB Design, now occupies the former offices of the
original incubator, on the top two floors of Blundell Streets Works Ltd. The
NWDA has recently opened a move-on space adjacent to the incubator – although
the rental income from this space goes back to the NWDA rather than ICDC.
Toxteth TV Ltd
This
is a company limited by guarantee. Its origins were as a UK Minister’s
initiative via the Department for Education and Skills. Its memoranda and
articles state that its function is to run a TV studio and encourage its use by
disadvantaged young people from across Merseyside. It currently has eight
directors, representing various local and national interests associated with
the Toxteth TV project. It also has a legal charge between it, the property it
holds and the Secretary of State for Education. Toxteth TV currently occupies
three large buildings on Windsor
Street in Liverpool
and runs these as a mix of workspace, teaching space and a TV studio and
editing rooms. Together these buildings contain +30,000 square foot – in a
former 1950s pub, a Victorian school and a church mission hall - and contain
some thirty different workspaces. It also houses some community facilities.
Toxteth
TV owns two buildings and leases the other. It sets rent levels, agrees
tenancies, maintains and lets properties, and liases with tenants – current and
future. It employs staff – currently a Chief Executive, a buildings manager,
her assistant and cleaners. It also contracts for maintenance, and for
technical services, runs the assets registers, does insurance cover etc. It
trades, and receives all the rents and other charges such as studio hires. From
this it pays all its costs. If there is anything left over, it passes this
through to a charity to undertake charitable works as defined by the objectives
of the charity. It can make application for grant and has benefited from £2.8m
grant in the past – from the then Capital Modernisation Fund, and ERDF
Objective One. But in the main it is expected not to apply for grants in the
future. This company is VAT registered because it trades. It co-ordinated the
capital works programme for Toxteth TV, and as a result reclaimed considerable
sums of VAT on the capital programme. Its activities are supported by Splendid Things.
This
is a registered charity. Its objectives are to support and encourage
educational activities in the field of media and to alleviate poverty through
such activities – classic charitable objectives. Its trustees are the same as
those of Toxteth TV Ltd, and it derives its income from surpluses created by
Toxteth TV Ltd and through making applications for grants and funds from public
and charitable sources. It employs a member of staff whose responsibility is
for development and additional fundraising. The activities it funds are either run
in house or out-sourced, often to organisations and companies located in the
Toxteth TV business cluster – but all activities are project focussed. In
short, if Splendid Things seeks to encourage an activity it must identify where
the funds will come from – and no funds means no activities. One clear
advantage is that a problem with one organisation cannot take down another. In
this way development activities are undertaken as and when the monies become
available through trading activities undertaken by Toxteth TV Ltd.
Keith Hackett
He has
been a consultant, who has worked as a sole trader since 1986, specialising in
employment-related research, strategic planning and project financing with
cultural organisations and enterprises, higher education institutions,
community organisations, governmental bodies and industry consortia, across Europe.
He
is best known for his detailed knowledge of utilising public and private
finances in Europe to grow jobs and generate
employment in the less traditional industrial sectors, and he authors and
speaks regularly on these topics. He has worked as a sole-trader since 1986 –
and since that date, has been registered self-employed with the UK Revenue, and
returned accounts to them on an annual basis.
During
all that time has worked from an office space of some type. This space has
changed with his circumstances – but typically this has comprised a space of
some 15 square meters (150 square foot). It has required a phone connection,
heating, light and storage space plus desk and computer. It has also needed to
be insured and secure.
This
workspace has always been housed within his home – but has not been registered
for Business Rates. Keith appointed an accountant in 1986 who prepares a set of
account annually without an audit. These accounts form the basis for an income
return to the revenue in respect of his professional work as a sole-trader.
Within these accounts an allowance is made for the costs incurred using the
space as an office. These costs cover a proportion of the overall heat, light
and insurance costs on the house as a whole.
Cedar Farm Gallery
This
is located on the site of a former pig farm, close to the village
of Maudsley, near Ormskirk in Lancashire. Began as an effort to diversify when
pig-farming began to get into financial difficulties in the 1990s, the gallery
complex has grown from a single converted building. Farming ceased completely
on the site in 2001, and it now operates entirely as a commercial enterprise,
converting and running a complex of former agricultural buildings that now
house cafes, shops, a gallery, artists studios and a teaching space.
The
whole complex remains in the ownership of the farming family that started the
enterprise – and has been funded completely by the owners themselves. They run
the enterprise as a wholly commercial operation, renting spaces to the various
enterprises involved. This includes twenty individual artists, craftspeople and
creative businesses. The galleries as a whole are a considerable visitor
attraction – and had 60,000 visits last year.
They
are also a significant source of local employment in a largely rural community
– with in excess of 50 full-time equivalent jobs on the site. Significantly the
teaching space is also a local community resource – although Julie Bailey who
owns and runs the operations – stresses that it in no way seeks to compete with
the local village hall.
As
a teaching space it concentrates on arts and crafts focused classes although it
has also become a significant venue for yoga and movement classes – because it
has under-floor heating. Julie, who has driven the developments for many years,
has been quietly but consistently critical of the public sector and its
attitude to the gallery – in two particular areas. The first concerns planning
conditions – which her operation meets because it is housed in former
agricultural buildings.
The
second concerns her organisation’s inability to qualify for grant-aid –
particularly to support capital works. On this second issue, she cannot understand
why public organisations providing facilities for artists get subsidy and she
does not. That said, she has had public assistance in two areas for which she
is grateful – she was a partner in North West Arts Board’s Setting Up Scheme
where she provided a free studio for a potter Hannah Murphy, and she has
currently a 20% contribution to her marketing costs via Lancashire
and Blackpool Tourism.
The
complex as a whole is a popular visitor destination and as a workspace for
artists generally – and particularly craftspeople, who find that the footfall
of visitors leads to steady sales of their work.
Eden Artisans
This
is a group of Artists and Craftspeople who have joined together to form a
co-operative, with the objective of displaying and selling their work. Together
they have been involved in a number of exhibitions and fairs throughout the
years including the Appleby Fair each August.
The
group all live close by Kirby Stephen in the Upper
Eden Valley
in Cumbria,
and have a collective commitment both to keeping craft skill alive, and to
producing arts and craft works of the highest quality using locally sources
materials wherever possible. To further these aims Eden Artisans rent a studio
space at the Farfield Mill in Sedburgh. This provides a focus for the group’s
activities and an important outlet for sales.
The
studio is occupied by one of the group throughout the time that Farfield Mills
is open to the public. Here individual members of the group produce work,
inter-act with the public visiting the Mill complex and sell the works made by
members within the group – all at the same time. The geographic proximity and
the personal networks amongst the individuals involved are a key component in
the success of this co-operative venture – as were the easy rental arrangements
offered by Farfield Mill, which requires one months rent and one months notice
either way.
This
means that the risks in taking a collective workspace were perceived by all
members of the co-operative to be minimal and the potential benefits large.
Similarly, the Mill offered considerable other attractions – the arrangements
around the gallery spaces, the on-site sales arrangements, and the variable
commissions charged for in-studio and in-gallery sales.
Other
benefits felt by the group from this co-operative working, are also tangible.
They see collective strength through co-operation, and a whole enterprise far
greater than the sum of its parts. Most critically they each as individuals,
value their own ability to do more than one thing at one time. Sales are rising
– which appears to be in part because of their efforts and confidence as a
group, and also because of the growing reputation of the Farfield Mills as a
destination for the purchase of arts and crafts.
Eden
Artisans are unusual at Farfield in that the are the only collective enterprise
occupying a studio within the Mill complex – all the remaining fifteen studio
spaces are occupied by artists working alone as individuals. Why this should be
in unclear, as many of the individual artists housed in the studios work in
media similar to those used within the Eden Artisans collective, and the prices
charged for the works on sale are also comparable.
It
could perhaps be because artists by their nature are individualistic, and often
choose to work alone. But this cannot be the only reason – and most likely it
is to do with co-operative tradition amongst farmers in the area, as well as
previous experience around The Woolclip co-operative shop.
In
terms of Eden Artisan’s own aspirations and future as a group, two issues
appear important. The first is an aspiration to grow the group as a “Upper Eden
Valley cluster” – or more
simply, to expand it to include other artists and craftspeople from the
specific place where the current membership is based.
The
second, although dependent of the first, would be to consider establishing a
second selling outlet. This second option would be highly dependent on
location, footfall, rent and commission arrangements etc. - and it would need a
tea-room on-site.
Overall
the establishment of a collective enterprise – a co-operative in this instance
– offers the group of individuals involved a mechanism whereby they can support
each other in the production and sale of their work.
It
provides a highly cost-effective vehicle for the group, which in this instance
is also structured in a way that shares the costs of the core studio through
shared sales commission arrangements and a collective arrangement for the
stewardship of the studio space and its contents.
The
model has the potential to be expanded should there be the demand to do so, and
offers an innovative arrangement both to bring individual’s products into the
market place but also to promote the artists and crafts people of a particular
place or locality.
It
is no accident that the co-operative references the valley where the members
live and work, and no reason why, over time, that the operation should not be
expanded to brand and sell work by other creative individuals resident in the Eden Valley.
Nor is there any reason why other groups of creative could not replicate this
model.
The
initiative was, and remains, privately financed. Each member of the
co-operative originally contributed £20 alongside their voluntary participation
in a number of meetings over a three month period.
Fairfield Mill Arts and Heritage Centre
This
is based in a former water-driven weaving mill in the Yorkshire
Dale National
park in East Cumbria. The
building fell empty in the 1992 after a long period of decline and many changes
in use. Subsequently it was the focus of an appeal to save the building and
bring it back into productive use – with a heritage focus.
A
charitable trust was established to save the building in 1993 – The Sedbergh
Buildings Preservation Trust. This organisation subsequently bought the
building with assistance from the John Paul Getty Jnr Trust and the Monument
Trust, and converted the building to a mixed arts and heritage use, with
assistance from the Northern Uplands Programme of the EU Structural Funds and
English Partnerships.
The
conversion plans were changed – from an arts and heritage centre with an
educational focus – when Arts Lottery funds were not approved. The amended
scheme incorporated artist studios and workspaces as an alternative. The remodelled
scheme, opened in 2001, comprises a mix of heritage and arts uses – with looms
and heritage exhibitions on two floors plus cafe, and artists studios and
exhibition areas in the remainder.
The
building totals 20,000 square foot, with the heritage elements covering 8,000,
and the studios another 4,000. In total there are 22 studio spaces providing
accommodation for the artists and craftspeople who rent them.
Rental
terms are monthly, and all-in, and the selling gallery at the heart of the
building exhibits products for sale for a commission. Commissions last year
paid to artists totalled £40,000.
Alternatively
the artists can sell directly from their own studios commission free. The
gallery will also process credit cards sales on behalf of itself and the
artists. It also houses and sells on behalf of non-residents but for a larger
commission.
The
proximity of the selling gallery and studio spaces compliment each other – and
add to the visitor footfall. The gallery facility is managed by a separate
trading company distinct from the Buildings Preservation Trust – itself now
re-named The Sedbergh and District Arts and Heritage Trust.
The
centre aims for a subsequent phase of development as a “Centre of Excellence
for Textiles,” an initiative that would include residential studios.
Yew Tree Barn
This is a commercial operation undertaken
by Wilson Reclamation Services Ltd – an architectural salvage and restoration
company operating from former agricultural premises located on the main A590
Kendal-to-Barrow road at Low Newton, near Cartmel in the South Lakeland.
Wilson
Reclamation Services Ltd have leased the properties for a number of years, and
run a successful architectural reclamation business from this site – which
includes retail and wholesale operations and store-rooms and yards open to the
public.
Off-road
parking is available and the nature of the business is specialist – but also
attractive to drop-in visitors as well. The operation has therefore developed a
steady footfall of visitors, and in consequence, over the past years the
operation has diversified – first with the addition of a cafe, and then with
“allied activities” such as furniture restorers.
Encouraged
by a suggestion from “Made In Cumbria” plus a small grant to cover part of the
capital works involved through its “Distinctly Cumbrian” Fund, the under-used
areas of the buildings – which total is in excess of 12,000 square foot – have
recently been converted for use as artists studios and an arts and crafts
gallery.
The
artist’s studio is prominently positioned near the entrance to the building and
on the way to the cafe. It is now occupied by a potter, who both produces and
sells work from there. The Potter, who was previously in a studio at Farfield
Mill in Sedburgh, gave his reasons for moving to Yew Tree Barn as a more
prominent position, better exposure for him individually, and it being nearer
his home. The upper floor of the main building also houses a gallery – which
sells local work, so reinforcing the Made In Cumbria mission.
Each
of the operations within the building is a stand-alone legal entity renting the
space they occupy – with the lease held by the operating company. Pamela
Wilson, the partner of Clive Wilson, who runs the operating company, Wilson
Reclamation Services, describes the developments as “a long term project”.
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